Speakers: Gareth Williams, Violin Family Professor of Classics, and Juliana Driever, Director of Academic Administration and Finance, Department of Classics.

Prospective students interested in the Advanced Graduate Certificate in Classics are encouraged to attend this information session to learn more about admissions requirements and curricular offerings. Representatives of the department faculty and administration will be in attendance to answer questions.

Speakers: Gareth Williams, Violin Family Professor of Classics, and Juliana Driever, Director of Academic Administration and Finance, Department of Classics.

Prospective students interested in the Advanced Graduate Certificate in Classics are encouraged to attend this information session to learn more about admissions requirements and curricular offerings. Representatives of the department faculty and administration will be in attendance to answer questions.

This Roundtable aims to advance some of the work of the 2013 conference hosted at Barnard, which focused on politics and aesthetics in ancient Greek literature and culture. This time around we are seeking to expand the scope to include perspectives on sensory aspects of art and performance and the cultural practices that inform them, as well as their reception, and to highlight work that focuses on affect, materialities, orientations, and post-human engagements with embodiment and the environment. A further expansion looks to work on the theory and philosophy of media, particularly the relationship between processes of transmission, aesthetics, and the senses. Another considers the subjective dimension of aesthetics but goes beyond questions of personal perspective, taste, or style to ponder (with Aristotle) the soul as a sensorium, which also invites questions about the relation between aesthetics and psychology and perception and epistemology.

We would like to invite you to participate in this event to take the opportunity to discuss the future of language learning and teaching in Higher Education in USA.

The 8th biennial pedagogy workshop is supported by the MGSA and the Program in Hellenic Studies at Columbia University and is organised by the MGSA Undergraduate Studies committee, comprising of:

Elsa Amanatidou (chair, Brown)

Nikolas P. Kakkoufa (workshop organizer, Columbia)

Despina Margomenou (Michigan)

A warm invitation is issued to people teaching in the fields comprising Modern Greek studies, particularly Greek language and related undergraduate courses on Greece, and to those developing, directing, or coordinating undergraduate curricula that include Greek instruction at the tertiary level.

The Center for the Ancient Mediterranean (CAM) at Columbia invites you to join us for "A Conference in Memory of Alan Cameron (1938-2017)" a two-day conference on Friday, October 26 and Saturday, October 27, 2018.

The Earle Prize for Excellence in Sight Translation in Greek and Latin will be awarded on the basis of a two-hour Greek and Latin sight translation exam. Open to all Columbia and Barnard undergraduates.

The Barnard Columbia Ancient Drama Group is pleased to present Aristophanes' "Frogs."

It’s 405 BCE and things aren’t looking too good. We’ve been at war for ages. We’ve lost money. We’ve lost men. A further and final blow—all the good tragedians are gone. Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, they’re all dead. Without our tragedians, we’re totally screwed. But Dionysus, the god of theater himself, is coming to the rescue. He’s got a plan to save the day, a plan that is so good and so crazy that it could only ever be pulled off in a comedy. Zeus willing, if Zeus indeed exists, it will all work out for the best. Join us to see how it all pans out.

The production is in Ancient Greek with English supertitles and is made possible by the Matthew Alan Kramer Fund. Directed by Carina de KlerkChorus and music directed by Brittany JohnsonMusic by Nathan Katkin

The Barnard Columbia Ancient Drama Group is pleased to present Aristophanes' "Frogs."

It’s 405 BCE and things aren’t looking too good. We’ve been at war for ages. We’ve lost money. We’ve lost men. A further and final blow—all the good tragedians are gone. Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, they’re all dead. Without our tragedians, we’re totally screwed. But Dionysus, the god of theater himself, is coming to the rescue. He’s got a plan to save the day, a plan that is so good and so crazy that it could only ever be pulled off in a comedy. Zeus willing, if Zeus indeed exists, it will all work out for the best. Join us to see how it all pans out.

The production is in Ancient Greek with English supertitles and is made possible by the Matthew Alan Kramer Fund. Directed by Carina de KlerkChorus and music directed by Brittany JohnsonMusic by Nathan Katkin